15 Quotes About Marriage That’ll Make You Believe In The Power Of Love

When you're writing the 13th wedding toast of the season, you might find that your own words are starting to come up short. So, there's a chance you'll start the painstaking search for the perfect quotes about marriage. You'll want the one you pick to be sincere, unique, personal, and romantic. You want it to capture the love of the couple and promise of married life.

You might be tempted to turn to television. Jim and Pam are perfect examples of true love, and who doesn't tear up when (re)watching Ben and Lesley's wedding? Or maybe you'll look to movies for the right words. Just close your eyes and point at any John Hughes film, and you're sure to grab a quote that will make the bride tear up. But when you really want the perfect quote, you have to turn to where the world's greatest romances exist: books.

Books have given us some of the greatest love stories. Lovers in literature have conquered fighting families, decade-long wars, religious persecution, and, in the most extreme cases, death to be with one another. They've crossed oceans and broken out of prison for one another. They are the best examples of faithfulness, everlasting love, and strong marriages that we have. And they have a lot to say about it, too.

So, in honor of love, here are 15 quotes that will help you believe in true love:

1. "He felt now that he was not simply close to her, but that he did not know where he ended and she began."

2. "They no longer felt like newlyweds, and even less like belated lovers. It was as if they had leapt over the arduous calvary of conjugal life and gone straight to the heart of love. They were together in silence like an old married couple wary of life, beyond the pitfalls of disillusion: beyond love. For they had lived together long enough to know that love was always love, anytime and anyplace, but it was more solid the closer it came to death."

3. "What greater thing is there for two human souls, than to feel that they are joined for life — to strengthen each other in all labour, to rest on each other in all sorrow, to minister to each other in all pain, to be one with each other in silent unspeakable memories at the moment of the last parting?"

4. “Mawidge is a dweam wiffin a dweam. The dweam of wuv wapped wiffin the gweater dweam of everwasting west. Eternity is our fwiend, wemember that, and wuv wiw fowwow you fowever.”

5. “So it's not gonna be easy. It's going to be really hard; we're gonna have to work at this everyday, but I want to do that because I want you. I want all of you, forever, everyday. You and me... everyday.”

7. “To be fully seen by somebody, then, and be loved anyhow — this is a human offering that can border on miraculous.”

8. "Husband and wife did not need to speak words to one another, not just from the old habit of living together but because in that one long-ago instant at least out of the long and shabby stretch of their human lives, even though they knew at the time it wouldn't and couldn't last, they had touched and become as God when they voluntarily and in advance forgave one another for all that each knew the other could never be."

9. “There is nothing more admirable than when two people who see eye to eye keep house as man and wife, confounding their enemies and delighting their friends.”

10. “It was unaccountable not to be obliged to go out to see her, not to have any occasion to be tormenting myself about her, not to have to write to her, not to be scheming and devising opportunities of being alone with her. Sometimes, of an evening, when I looked up from my writing, and saw her seated opposite, I would lean back in my chair, and think how queer it was that there we were, alone together as a matter of course — nobody’s business any more — all the romance of our engagement put away on a shelf, to rust — no one to please but one another—one another to please, for life.”

12. "We stood quite still for some time, my cheek against his chest and his face against my hair, drawing strength from each other for whatever might come next. Being married."

13. "The moon looks wonderful in this warm evening light, just as a candle flame looks beautiful in the light of morning. Light withing light. It seems like a metaphor for something...It seems to me to be a metaphor for the human soul, the singular light within the great general light of existence. Or it seems like poetry within language. Perhaps wisdom within experience. Or marriage within friendship and love."

14. "He's more myself than I am. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.”

15. "This household happiness did not come all at once, but John and Meg had found the key to it, and each year of married life taught them how to use it, unlocking the treasuries of real home love and mutual helpfulness, which the poorest may possess, and the richest cannot buy."